Weaver v. Harlan

48 Mo. App. 319, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 103
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 Mo. App. 319 (Weaver v. Harlan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weaver v. Harlan, 48 Mo. App. 319, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 103 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Biggs, J.

This is an action under the statute (R. S. 1889, sec. 5216) to recover from the defendant, as a stakeholder, money which was alleged to have been bet on the result of the election of the president of the United States. The amended petition reads:

[322]*322“ The plaintiff, for an amended petition, herein states that heretofore, to-wit, on the third day of September, 1888, in the county of Jasper, state of Missouri, said plaintiff and one Isaac Perkins made and entered into a wager or a bet on the late presidential election, then pending, which said election was duly authorized by the constitution and law of the United States and the several states thereof, the said plaintiff betting $500 that Grover Cleveland would be elected' president of the United States, and the said Perkins bet the same amount that Benjamin Harrison would be elected president; that plaintiff then and there placed the sum of money so bet by him, to-wit, the sum of $500, in the hands of the defendant, as stakeholder, to abide the result of said election; and that afterwards, to-wit, on the ninth day of November, 1888, and while such money was still in the hands of the defendant, and not paid over by him to the other party to such wager, and before the expiration of the 'time agreed upon by the parties for the determination of said bet or wager, the plaintiff demanded the return of said money so placed in the defendant’s hands as the holder of such stake, and the defendant refused to return the sum or any part thereof, whereby a right of action accrued to the plaintiff according to the statute of this state in such cases made and provided.

“Wherefore plaintiff demands judgment against said defendant for said sum of $500 and interest thereon from the ninth day of November, 1888, together with the cost of this action.”

The answer was a general denial. The cause was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury, and the finding and judgment were for the plaintiff. On this appeal the defendant claims: First. That the amended petition does not state a cause of action under the statute. Second. That the court admitted incompetent and irrelevant testimony. Third. That the court erred in the instructions.

[323]*323I. The defendant’s first assignment rests on an objection to the introduction of evidence, because the amended petition failed to state a cause of action. The specific ground of this objection, as disclosed in this court, is that the pleading failed to state that the defendant received the money, knowing that it was staked on a wager declared to be gaming by the statutes of the state. One rule of pleading is that, if the facts necessary to constitute a cause of action are imperfectly stated in the petition, the defendant waives the objection by answering. Objections to the introduction of evidence, or a motion in arrest on account of such defects, will avail him nothing. Spurlock v. Railroad, 93 Mo. 530; Donaldson v. Butler Co., 98 Mo. 163; McDermott v. Claas, 104 Mo. 14; Sayer v. Devore, 99 Mo. 437; Mitchell v. City of Clinton, 99 Mo. 153. There is another rule of pleading to the effect that facts, which are necessarily implied from the direct averments in a pleading, will be deemed as having been averred. Dillon v. Hunt, 82 Mo. 150; Eans v. Bank, 79 Mo. 182. In the case at bar the petition did not directly aver that the defendant knew that the money deposited with him had been wagered on an election authorized by the constitution and laws of the state, but the petition contained averments of the particulars of the wager and upon what election the money had been wagered, and it was then stated that the money was placed in the defendant’s hands as stakeholder, “to abide the result of said election.” The petition seems to us to be good under the last rule. The fact, that the defendant knew that the money had been bet on the result of a presidential election, must be implied from the other allegations. If we are wrong in this, then the most that can be said is that the fact of the defendant’s knowledge was imperfectly stated, a defect which could be taken advantage of only by direct attack. The defendant having failed to do this, he must be deemed to have waived the objection. Therefore, if either [324]*324rule'be applied, the defendant’s objection to the introduction of evidence was properly overruled.

II. The action of the court as to the instructions, presents the real question in the case. The objection made to the plaintiff’s instructions is that they authorized a recovery, if the plaintiff demanded a return of the-money before the defendant paid it over to the other party to the bet. The defendant’s view of the law is. presented in the following instruction, which the court refused: “The court, sitting as a jury, declares the law to be that, if the court finds from the evidence that the plaintiff on September 3, 1888, entered into á wager-in Jasper county, Missouri, on the presidential election then pending and to be held, and which was held on the-sixth day of November, 1888, the plaintiff betting $500-that Grover Cleveland would, at said election, be elected president, and said Perkins betting $500 that Benjamin Harrison would, at said,election, be elected president of the United States, and that said sums were, by said, plaintiff and Perkins, put into the hands of 'the defendant as stakeholder, to abide the result of said election, then in that case the plaintiff cannot recover the sum so-deposited and staked by him, unless he has shown by a preponderance or greater. weight of evidence that he-demanded of the stakeholder (defendant) the return of' the same before the determination of said bet, and before-it was' reasonably apparent to plaintiff, from the-returns of the published accounts of the results of' said election in the several states, that plaintiff had lost, his wager.”

The correctness of the court’s action as to the-instructions must depend upon the interpretation to be-given section 5216 of the statute, upon which the action-is brought. It reads: “Every' stakeholder who shall knowingly receive any money or property, staked upon any betting declared gaming by the foregoing provisions, shall be liable to the party who placed such money or property in his hands, both before and after [325]*325the determination of such bet, and the delivery of the money or property to the winner shall be no defense to any action brought by the losing party for the recovery thereof: Provided, that no stakeholder shall be liable afterwards, unless a demand has been made of such stakeholder for the money or property in his possession previous to the expiration of the time agreed upon by the parties for the determination of the bet' or wager.”

If the defendant’s interpretation of this section, as indicated by his instruction, is to prevail, then the statute is merely declaratory of the common law. Humphreys v. McGee, 13 Mo. 435; Hayden v. Little, 35 Mo. 418. ' The rule of the common law is that, so long as a party can withdraw from a wagering contract without dishonor to himself, the law will help him to do so. But, if he waits until the determination of the bet, or until it is reasonably certain -that he is a loser, his penitential tears will not avail him. The law will leave him to reap the results of his folly. This rule, in so far as it is applicable to the parties directly concerned, is highly equitable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Mo. App. 319, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-harlan-moctapp-1892.